@article {Al-Anani25,
author = {Al-Anani, Khalil},
title = {The Muslim Brotherhood{\textquoteright}s Conception of Citizenship Rights in Egypt},
volume = {11},
number = {3},
pages = {25--46},
year = {2018},
doi = {10.1525/caa.2018.113002},
publisher = {University of California Press Journals},
abstract = {How do Islamist movements perceive citizenship rights, particularly in conservative societies such as the case in the Middle East? This study attempts to answer this question by examining the case of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. Conventional wisdom demonstrates that Islamic movements adopt illiberal views towards women and minorities, particularly non-Muslims, because of their conservative and rigid interpretation of religion. This study argues that religion is not the only factor that shapes these views. By unpacking the position of the Brotherhood towards women and Christians{\textquoteright} rights in Egypt, it shows that the Islamists{\textquoteright} conception of citizenship is driven by ideological and political considerations. It contends that the Brotherhood adopts an ambivalent and ambiguous understanding of citizenship that can be construed by three key factors: ideological stance, organizational cohesion, and political calculations.},
URL = {https://caa.ucpress.edu/content/11/3/25},
eprint = {https://caa.ucpress.edu/content/11/3/25.full.pdf},
journal = {Contemporary Arab Affairs}
}